VC Goodoory, M Khasawneh et al. Gastroenterol 2023; 165: 1206-1218. Open Access! Efficacy of Probiotics in Irritable Bowel Syndrome: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
After performing a systematic literature review, the authors identified randomized controlled trials (RCTs) recruiting adults with IBS, comparing probiotics with placebo were eligible; this included 82 eligible trials, containing 10,332 patients. However, only 24 RCTs were at low risk of bias across all domains.
Key findings:
- There was some evidence to support the use of some probiotics for global IBS symptoms, abdominal pain, and abdominal bloating or distension (highly detailed analysis of the studies in article –Figures 1-3 and Tables 1-3)
- There was moderate certainty in the evidence for a benefit of Escherichia strains, low certainty for Lactobacillus strains and L. plantarum 299V, and very low certainty for combination probiotics, LacClean Gold S, Duolac 7s, and Bacillus strains
- For abdominal pain, there was low certainty in the evidence for a benefit of S. cerevisiae I-3856 and Bifidobacterium strains, and very low certainty for combination probiotics, Lactobacillus, Saccharomyces, and Bacillus strains
- For abdominal bloating or distension, there was very low certainty in the evidence for a benefit of combination probiotics and Bacillus strains
- The relative risk of experiencing any adverse event, in 55 trials, including more than 7000 patients, was not significantly higher with probiotics
My take: This study shows that it is difficult to confidently recommend specific probiotics for IBS as the certainty in the evidence for efficacy by GRADE criteria was low to very low. In addition, the quality control of production of most probiotics is uncertain.
Related blog posts:
- Evidence-Based IBS Treatment Recommendations from ACG
- Probiotics and Recurrent Abdominal Pain
- Can We Predict Which Patients With Irritable Bowel Will Respond to Dietary Manipulation Based on Their Microbiome?
- PERSUADE Study: I Guarantee That It Will …
